Birdwell v. Burleson

72 S.W. 446, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 31, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 410
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 72 S.W. 446 (Birdwell v. Burleson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birdwell v. Burleson, 72 S.W. 446, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 31, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 410 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

STKEETMAH, Associate Justice.

Appellant brought this suit to recover one tract of 20 83-100 acres of land, and an undivided half interest in a tract of 32 3-4 acres. Upon trial, without a jury, the District Court rendered judgment for appellee.

We find the facts necessary to a decision of the ease, as follows:

The land in controversy was part of a tract of 236 acres, formerly owned by Martha J. Weir. Mrs. Weir by her will gave the 236 acres to her daughter, Louisa Burleson, wife of appellee, for her life, with remainder to her children, in equal shares. Mrs. Louisa Burleson died March 18th, 1894, and left surviving her husband (appellee) and eight children: Cornelia, Joseph, Sallie, Martha J., Stephen, Lou, Lizzie, and Mary.

Prior to the death of Louisa Burleson, she and her husband and children resided on said tract of 236 acres, using the entire tract as a homestead. After her death, appellee and the' children continued to occupy and use the tract in the same manner.

In July, 1894, Joseph Burleson died, unmarried, intestate and without. issue, and appellee inherited from him an undivided one-sixteenth of said 236 acres. In October, 1894, appellee, with his minor children, moved to the town of Buda, about 2 1-2 miles from the land for the purpose of sending the children to school.

*32 Up to this time all of the interests were undivided, but in 1896, some of the elder children threatened to sue for partition, and appellee caused a partition suit to be instituted in the name of Martha J. Burleson; and on September 23, 1896, a decree was rendered, making partition of the land. It was divided into eight lots or tracts, and allotted to the several owners in the manner shown by the following sketch:

By this decree lot Ho. 8, containing 20 83-100 acres, was set apart to appellee, and he was divested of all right, title and interest in the remainder of the 236 acres. The dwelling house and all outhouses were situated on lot Ho. 6, which was set apart to Mary Burleson, the youngest child. Stephen, Lou, Mary, and Lizzie were at that time minors, and their father D. C. Burleson continued to rent their parts and his together, and used the rents for the support of the

On December 28, 1896, Lou Burleson died, unmarried, intestate, and without issue, and appellee inherited0 from her an undivided half interest in lot 5. Appellee continued to live with the remaining minor children at Buda until the trial of this case. He continued to exercise the control and management of their part of the land, renting it together with his own, and using the rents all alike for the support of the family. It was his intention all the time when he had finished sending the children to school, to return to the farm and live in the house on lot 6, using the other tracts in connection with it as a homestead for the family. If the children should marry and he could no longer live in the house on lot 6, it was his intention to exchange his part of lot 5 for land adjoining lot 8, and live there. At the time of the partition,^parts of lots 5 and 8 were in cultivation. After that no further improvement was made on either lot.

The children have never had a guardian of their persons or estates. Appellee never acquired any other homestead.

On December 3, 1897, D. M. Beagan obtained a judgment in a justice court in Hays County against D. C. Burleson for $72. On December 14, 1897, an abstract of said judgment was duly recorded and indexed in Hays County. May 6, 1898, an execution was issued on said judgment, which was levied on lot 8, and an undivided half of lot 5, and on June 7, 1898, said lot 8 and half of lot 5 were regularly sold under said execution to appellant W. S. Birdwell for $25, and a proper conveyance of said land was executed and delivered to him by the sheriff.

*33 Upon these facts the District Court rendered judgment for appellee. There are no findings of fact or law in the record, but the judgment necessarily involves the finding that both tracts of land were exempt as homestead, and the only question presented on this appeal is whether such finding was warranted by the facts.

Appellant contends that whatever homestead rights appellee had in the 236 acres prior to the partition were, by that decree, limited' to the tract allotted to him, and designated as lot 8; and that decree, together with his removal to the town of Buda, operated as an abandonment of all the rest of the tract. He maintains that the undivided half interest in lot 5, being acquired afterwards, while appellee was not residing on the tract, and there béing no evidence of acts of preparation to use it as a homestead, it never became impressed with the homestead character.

As to lot 8, it is insisted that by the decree and the removal of appellee, he had divested himself of all interest in lot 6, on which the dwelling was situated, and as there was no dwelling on lot 8 or lot 5, and appellee did not intend to build a dwelling on either of said lots, his intention to return and occupy the house on lot 6, if permitted to do so, was not sufficient to preserve the homestead, character of lot 8.

Appellant relies upon the case of Franklin v. Coffee, 18 Texas, 413, and others which hold that it is not two hundred acres of land belonging to the head of the family which is exempt, but the homestead, and that there must be a homestead over which the Constitution may throw its shield, and not land, merely, upon which the owner may or may not put his cabin, mansion, or improvements.

As bearing more particularly on the interest in lot 5, appellant cites the case of Brooks v. Chatham, 57 Texas, 31, and others, which hold that where land is acquired, a mere intention on the part of the owner is not sufficient to make it his homestead, but that such intention must be evidenced by acts of preparation to use it as a hoemstead.

If we should agree that the facts showed a complete abandonment of lot 6, upon which the dwelling and outhouses were situated, so that appellee could have no homestead rights in it, then these questions would become important in the decision of the case. It therefore becomes necessary to determine the nature and extent of appellee’s rights at the time of the levy and sale in lots 6 and 5. It can not be doubted that, prior to his removal from the premises and before the partition, he had an undivided interest in the whole 236 acres, and that this was exempt as a homestead (Luhn v. Stone, 65 Texas, 439 ; Clements v. Lacy, 51 Texas, 639); nor can it be claimed that his removal to the neighboring village to educate his children, with the intention of returning to occupy the place, operated as an abandonment. Thomas v. Williams, 50 Texas, 269 ; Aultman v. Allen, 12 Texas Civ. App., 227.

The decree of partition giving him lot 8 as his entire share and divesting him of all title and interest in the remainder, presents the serious question. After this decree, what were his rights, as far as lots 5 and 6 *34 were concerned ? They became the property of his two minor children, who were part of his family, and who had no guardian of their persons or estates.

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Bluebook (online)
72 S.W. 446, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 31, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birdwell-v-burleson-texapp-1902.